Quatrefoil Library is a non-profit lending library and community center in Minneapolis that specializes in LGBTQIA+ material. Its circulating collections include books, DVDs, and CDs, but patrons can also access non-circulating periodicals, comics, zines, and Quatrefoil’s founder’s archives on site at 1220 East Lake Street. Open since 1986, it is the third-oldest library of its kind in the US.
Dick Hewetson and David Irwin proposed the idea of a Minnesota gay lending library at brunch with friends on September 11, 1983. By that time, the couple had amassed a large collection of gay and lesbian fiction and books, which they loaned to friends. Lawyer and brunch attendee Ann Richtman quickly drafted the original articles of incorporation for the library as a non-profit. Irwin insisted that the library be named for Quatrefoil, a gay pulp novel by James Barr (the pseudonym of James Fugaté) published in 1950; Irwin believed Quatrefoil depicted homosexuality more positively than other books of its time.
In 1985, Matt Stark, the executive director of the Minnesota Civil Liberties Union and a friend of Hewetson, offered two rooms of rental space for the library in the MCLU’s new building at 1021 West Broadway in North Minneapolis. Quatrefoil formally opened to the public on February 4, 1986, and held an opening celebration the following May. Thanks to donations, by the end of 1986 Quatrefoil had expanded to include 2,500 books crammed into five rooms at the MCLU building.
In June 1987, Quatrefoil moved to the third floor of the remodeled Richards Gordon Building in St. Paul at 1619 Dayton Avenue. In the same year, the library implemented a new cataloging system and began to charge late fees for unreturned library material. In 1991, it moved from the third floor to the basement level of the Gordon Building to accommodate the continually expanding collection.
Volunteers are an intrinsic part of Quatrefoil’s history. Staff and leadership roles at the library have been unpaid volunteer positions since the library’s founding, excluding several short-term, grant-project positions. In 1988, Quatrefoil established elections for a board of directors to join the Cooperating Fund Drive (CFD), a grassroots community fundraising group. After this change, the CFD summarily accepted the library’s application to be a member in 1989. Overall, volunteer numbers remained steady in the 1990s and early 2000s. In 1992, seventy volunteers donated 2,935 hours; in 1997, sixty-three volunteers logged 2,123 hours; in 2001, sixty-five volunteers worked a total of 3,352 hours; and in 2006, eighty volunteers contributed 4,296 hours.
By the mid-2000s, the library had outgrown the Gordon Building and needed a community meeting space. Then, in December of 2012, staff announced that they would be moving to the Spirit on Lake building on East Lake Street in Minneapolis the following year. After a coordinated volunteer group effort, Quatrefoil closed the Gordon Building location on September 23, 2013, and the library officially reopened to the public on November 1 on East Lake Street. After moving back to Minneapolis, it has increasingly become a community center that hosted myriad speaker events, workshops, community groups, and book discussion groups in Spirit on Lake’s community room.
In 2002, Quatrefoil volunteers created the library’s first website. They further updated their technology by implementing electronic barcodes to catalog and check out library materials in 2012; by launching their online Library World electronic catalog for patrons in 2013; and by making a new website in May 2014.
More recently, Quatrefoil has increased the public’s accessibility to its collections. In 2019, the library abolished, and offered full amnesty for, all overdue fines. In March 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic, it closed but offered curbside pickup for members. To remove financial barriers to access, the library began to offer free membership in 2021, and in 2022, it introduced a free e-book and audiobook service to all members residing in the United States.
Since its founding, the library has consistently supported the broader LGBTIA+ community of the Twin Cities and Minnesota. Volunteers from Quatrefoil have regularly attended and hosted events at Twin Cities Pride since at least 1988, and since 2016, Quatrefoil volunteers have attended Pride events throughout Minnesota and Wisconsin on behalf of the non-profit. Since 2019, Quatrefoil has awarded an annual competitive scholarship for LGBTQIA+ students attending Minnesota colleges and universities.
Dick Hewetson.
https://www.dickhewetson.net/home.html
Gay Bookworm (Quatrefoil newsletter), 1986–1990. Quatrefoil Library.
Gehlen, Iggy. Conversation with the author, March 15, 2025.
Hogan, Karen. Conversation with the author, March 10, 2025.
Keim, Adam G. History of the Quatrefoil Library. Friends of the Bill of Rights Foundation, 2008.
“Minneapolis’ Quatrefoil: America’s 2nd-Oldest [sic] LGBTQ Library.” CBS News, July 29, 2017.
https://www.cbsnews.com/minnesota/news/quatrefoil-lgbtq-library
Montes, Ollin. Conversation with the author, March 16, 2025.
Quatrefoil Library.
https://qlibrary.org
Quatrefoil Library collection development policy, May 10, 2024. Quatrefoil Library.
Quatrefolio, (Quatrefoil newsletter), 1991–2025. Quatrefoil Library.
Robbins, Kathy. Conversation with the author, February 28, 2025.
Sturdevant, Andy. “LGBT History Is Lovingly Preserved at Quatrefoil Library on Lake Street.” MinnPost, April 17, 2014. https://www.minnpost.com/stroll/2014/04/lgbt-history-lovingly-preserved-quatrefoil-library-lake-street
Van Cleve, Stewart. Land of 10,000 Loves: A History of Queer Minnesota. University of Minnesota Press, 2012.
Quatrefoil Library opens in Minneapolis on February 4, 1986. It is one of the first gay lending libraries in the US.
Dick Hewetson and David Irwin meet at Integrity, a gay social and support group hosted by Episcopal Churches. The two begin collecting gay and lesbian books, which Hewetson stores in their condominium’s linen closet and lends to friends.
The Gay Community Center of Philadelphia (now the William Way LGBT Community Center) opens in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, with the first gay lending library in the United States.
Hewetson and Irwin propose the idea of a gay lending library in the Twin Cities to Dan Hanson, Keith Grennier, Jane Lilja, and Ann Richtman on September 11. Richtman, a lawyer, quickly drafts articles of incorporation for Quatrefoil as a non-profit.
Quatrefoil Library opens in the MCLU Building on West Broadway in Minneapolis on February 4.
Pat Bond performs her one-woman show “Lorena Hickock and Eleanor Roosevelt” to benefit Quatrefoil Library on May 8 and 9.
In June, Quatrefoil moves to the third floor of the Richards Gordon Building due to their quickly expanding collection. The Gordon Building was a school remodeled into an office space at Dayton and Snelling avenues in St. Paul.
The library moves to the basement of the Gordon Building.
Library volunteers celebrate Quatrefoil’s tenth anniversary with a champagne-and-cake reception in the library.
Quatrefoil celebrates its twentieth anniversary and co-sponsors the first ALMS Conference—dedicated to public history institutions with LGBTQIA+ collections—with the University of Minnesota’s Tretter Collection in May.
Quatrefoil Library officially retires the “blue book pocket cards” used to check out material and implements electronic barcodes to catalog and check out books. Karen Hogan headed the project.
Scott Breyfogle, Kathy Robbins, Don Yager, Rick Groger, Mitch Marks (all Quatrefoil volunteers), and Bob Rose (UW-Eau Claire) coordinate logistics for the library’s move to Minneapolis.
Quatrefoil closes its St. Paul location in the Gordon Building on September 29. It reopens in a Minneapolis location at Spirit on Lake on November 9.
Quatrefoil volunteers begin to attend Pride events outside the Twin Cities to represent the library and community center.
The library offers permanent fine amnesty and no longer charges late fees.
In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, Quatrefoil closes its library space and offers roadside pickup to library patrons. The library also issues a statement affirming the dignity of Black and brown lives in the wake of the killing of George Floyd.
In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, Quatrefoil closes its library space and offers roadside pickup to library patrons. The library also issues a statement affirming the dignity of Black and brown lives after the killing of George Floyd.
Quatrefoil re-opens to the public. Following the initiative of Claude Peck, president of Quatrefoil’s board of directors, the library implements free library membership for all. The library also launches their e-book and audiobook service for members.